Partners benefit patients
11/22/2004 Chris Birk Scrantontimes.com "I didn't accept it as much as Mary (his wife) did," he said. "I had a tough time." "With me and our children, he managed to pull through," said Mrs. McHale. "Especially you, Mary," said her husband. Science says he may be right. Male cancer patients with wives or live-in partners have significantly higher survival rates than those who don't, according to a national study -- analyzing 1,822 people with head and neck cancer -- that included patients treated at Mercy Hospital in Scranton by local physician and cancer specialist Dr. Harmar D. Brereton. The intriguing, if intuitive, results were culled by a national team of physicians and coordinated through the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group, a cancer research base in Philadelphia. But the study, presented at a June conference, posits a rather one-sided worldview: Female patients with partners don't live any longer than those without. Explaining the absence of a supportive quid pro quo invites a host of social speculation. But Dr. Brereton is hopeful the new information will eventually help improve the lives of all cancer patients, regardless of gender. "The wonderful thing that came up, and it's something that all doctors know, is if you're married, you can't imagine how valuable that asset is in going through your treatment," said Dr. Brereton, of the Northeast Radiation Oncology Center in Dunmore. "Now that we're showing there's a real statistically significant survival advantage to that circumstance, how can we arrange for something that is a facsimile [...]